Breast implants

Breast implants are increasingly common in general breast radiology practice.

Classification

Location

Breast implants may be placed behind the glandular tissue but in front of the pectoral muscle:

subglandular

submammary

retroglandular

retromammary

The second position of breast implants is behind the pectoral muscle; this has been termed subpectoral or retropectoral.

In women who have implants placed after mastectomy, the implant may be placed behind the pectoralis muscle. Augmentation can also be done by using an implant and rotated latissimus dorsi muscle (so-called LADO-FLAP).

Surgical access

There are multiple options regarding the surgical access for placing the breast implant. Selection of an access is primarily based on the implant size, type and location. Furthermore, skin quality, residual breast tissue and body habitus also influence the decision for the used surgical access. Prior breast surgery or breast deformities (e.g. Poland syndrome) limit the possible options. The typical access ways are:

inframammary (most common)

periareolar

transaxillary

transumbilical

Types

The implants may be composed of saline, silicone or a combination of both.

They come in a variety of types including:

single-lumen gel:

silicone gel-filled

single-lumen adjustable:

silicone gel-filled, to which can be added a variable amount of saline at the time of placement

saline-filled, dextran-filled, PVP-filled:

dextran-filled (some early implants), PVP-filled (Bioplasty), and the rest saline-filled

standard double-lumen:

silicone gel inner lumen, saline outer lumen

reverse double-lumen:

saline inner lumen, silicone gel outer lumen

reverse-adjustable double-lumen:

silicone gel inner and outer lumens, variable amount of saline added to inner lumen at the time of placement